Telomeres: Hallmarks of radiosensitivity

Telomeres: Hallmarks of radiosensitivity

Available online at www.sciencedirect.com Biochimie 90 (2008) 60e72 www.elsevier.com/locate/biochi Review Telomeres: Hallmarks of radiosensitivity ...

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Available online at www.sciencedirect.com

Biochimie 90 (2008) 60e72 www.elsevier.com/locate/biochi

Review

Telomeres: Hallmarks of radiosensitivity Ali Ayouaz, Christophe Raynaud, Claire Heride, Deborah Revaud, Laure Sabatier* Commissariat a` l’Energie Atomique (CEA), DSV-Radiobiology and Oncology Unit DSV/IRCM/SRO, BP6 92265 Fontenay-aux-Roses, France Received 12 July 2007; accepted 18 September 2007 Available online 22 September 2007

Abstract Telomeres are the very ends of the chromosomes. They can be seen as natural double-strand breaks (DSB), specialized structures which prevent DSB repair and activation of DNA damage checkpoints. In somatic cells, attrition of telomeres occurs after each cell division until replicative senescence. In the absence of telomerase, telomeres shorten due to incomplete replication of the lagging strand at the very end of chromosome termini. Moreover, oxidative stress and accumulating reactive oxygen species (ROS) lead to an increased telomere shortening due to a less efficient repair of SSB in telomeres. The specialized structures at telomeres include proteins involved in both telomere maintenance and DNA repair. However when a telomere is damaged and has to be repaired, those proteins might fail to perform an accurate repair of the damage. This is the starting point of this article in which we first summarize the well-established relationships between DNA repair processes and maintenance of functional telomeres. We then examine how damaged telomeres would be processed, and show that irradiation alters telomere maintenance leading to possibly dramatic consequences. Our point is to suggest that those consequences are not restricted to the short term effects such as increased radiation-induced cell death. On the contrary, we postulate that the major impact of the loss of telomere integrity might occur in the long term, during multistep carcinogenesis. Its major role would be to act as an amplificator event unmasking in one single step recessive radiation-induced mutations among thousands of genes and providing cellular proliferative advantage. Moreover, the chromosomal instability generated by damaged telomeres will favour each step of the transformation from normal to fully transformed cells. Ó 2007 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. Keywords: Telomere; DNA repair; Chromosome instability; Radiosensitivity; Radiation induced carcinogenesis

1. Introduction

2. Telomeres and broken ends: role of ‘‘stability keepers’’

Telomeres are specialized structures protecting the ends of chromosomes from DSB repair and from activation of DNA damage checkpoints [1]. DNA repair processes interact with telomeres and contribute to telomere maintenance. However, the ways damaged telomeres are processed remain poorly understood. This paper intends to give deep insights into the paradoxical features underlying telomere maintenance and repair of telomeric damage. We will examine the short term and long term consequences of damaged telomeres which are cellular radiosensitive and the promotion of the transmission of radiation induced damage, key steps in radiation-induced tumour progression.

The telomere is composed of TTAGGG repeat tracts associated with specific proteins. Association of telomeric sequences and specific proteins form a high order structure. Telomeric DNA is folded back in d-loop/t-loop structures: telomere’s G-rich overhang generated by incomplete replication at the chromosome ends, invades the double-stranded region to form a T-loop. The main function of telomeres is to protect the chromosome ends and to prevent activation of DNA damage response. Defined as the caps of linear chromosomes, they serve to distinguish normal ends from DSBs. Many proteins, involved in DNA repair and checkpoints, are also required for telomere maintenance. Therefore we could wonder how cells are able to discriminate normal from abnormal telomeres. Through the interaction between telomere maintenance and DNA repair, cells develop a sophisticated strategy to detect

* Corresponding author. Tel.: þ33 1 46 54 83 51; fax: þ33 1 46 54 87 58. E-mail address: [email protected] (L. Sabatier). 0300-9084/$ - see front matter Ó 2007 Published by Elsevier Masson SAS. doi:10.1016/j.biochi.2007.09.011

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telomeres [16]. Nevertheless, its contribution to telomere length regulation is less clear. Despite the absence of Ku86 affected telomere capping in mouse, data relative to telomere length are conflicting. Abolition of Ku86 displayed a telomere shortening in mouse embryonary fibroblast (MEF) [13] whereas other reports showed a slight elongation of telomeres in the same model [8]. Taken together these data confirm that Ku86 is an essential partner in telomere capping and prevents aberrant recombination events in order to preserve telomere integrity. Similarly, DNA-PKcs deficiency resulted in telomere uncapping in MEFs. In addition, natural mutations of DNAPKcs have been observed in severe combined immunodeficiency defects syndrome (SCID) in human and mouse cells. This mutation did not completely abolish DNA-PKcs activity. Cells derived from SCID mouse exhibited abnormal elongation of telomeres and telomere fusions [12,17,18]. Restoration of DNA-PKcs activity restores normal telomere length in SCID [19]. In contrast complete suppression of DNA-PKcs activity by knockout did not change the telomere size [12]. Hence the role of DNA-PKcs in telomere length cannot be clarified yet. However its participation in telomere capping has been reported several times. DNA-PKcs / cells showed a significant increase of telomere fusions [20]. In parallel pharmacological inhibition of DNA-PKcs enhanced telomere associations in human cells and confirmed the importance of DNA-PKcs in telomere homeostasis [20]. Moreover, chromosome orientation FISH (CoFISH) studies revealed that in the absence of DNA-PKcs, fusions occurred between both leading strands after replication suggesting that DNA-PKcs was involved in post replicative telomere capping [20]. Other components of NHEJ have been shown to participate in telomere maintenance. DNA Ligase IV is often described as a potential actor at telomeres. DNA Ligase IV, involved in the ligation of DNA broken ends, is essential in mammalian cells. Its suppression is lethal in embryogenesis but invalidation of P53 in mouse cells rescue lethality of DNA Ligase IV / [21]. In contrast, studies on two cell lines from patients affected by DNA Ligase IV mutation revealed an accelerated shortening comparable to AT (ataxia-telangiectasia) cells [3]. A mouse strain with a hypomorphic mutation shows that diminished DNA double-strand break repair leads to adult stem cell exhaustion over time [22]. However the reduced

eroded or dysfunctional telomeres. Damaged telomere and proper repair failure might result in telomere damage as shown in Fig. 1. It has been reported recently that telomere attrition or dysfunction results in the formation of the hallmark of DNA damage response [2]. Hence, uncapping or senescence elicits the formation of foci including several DNA repair proteins such as 53BP1, H2AX, ATM, Mre11/rad50/NBS1 (MRN) complex, Chk1/2. Correlation between accelerated shortening and hypersensitivity to IR in DSB repair deficiency syndromes argue in favour of a link between telomere maintenance and DNA repair [3]. 2.1. Role of NHEJ in telomere maintenance NHEJ is one of most important pathway in the recognition and processing of DSBs in several organisms. In mammalian cells, NHEJ ensure alignment of DNA ends and ligation by end-joining involving several proteins. NHEJ does not necessarily require sequence homology to join both broken ends. After DSB formation, the complex Ku/DNA-PKcs (DNAdependent protein kinase catalytic subunit) is involved in initial recognition. Ku binds to DNA ends and recruits DNA-PKcs which can phosphorylate several targets [4]. This is followed by the removal of several base pairs and end-toend ligation performed by DNA Ligase IV, XRCC4 and XLF [5e7]. Several kinds of IR-induced damage form complex DSBs which would be processed before ligation. Studies in mammalian cells revealed the role of NHEJ in the protection of chromosome ends. Cells deficient in Ku and DNA-PKcs exhibited premature senescence and high proportions of chromosomal aberrations [8,9]. Absence of Ku86 and DNA-PKcs in mouse cells resulted in an increase of telomere end-to-end fusions with telomeric sequences at the fusion point [10e13]. Both proteins are required for telomere capping in mouse cells. It has been reported that Ku86 acts in telomere homeostasis. Indeed transient inhibition of Ku86 by siRNA caused telomere shortening and telomere dysfunction leading at least to apoptosis [14]. In addition, the suppression of a single allele of Ku86 in somatic cells induced severe telomere shortening associated with telomere fusions [15]. In parallel, deletion of Ku70 leads to an increase of Telomere Sister chromatid Exchange (TSCE) (hallmark of HR events at telomeres) indicating that Ku70 prevents inappropriate recombination at

I

II

III

IV

61

V

VI

VII

*

Fig. 1. Telomere dysfunctions in human cells. Metaphase spread with telomeric DNA detected by FISH (red); DNA stained with DAPI (blue). Examples of the chromosomal aberrations: (I) Loss of single telomere (STL). (II) Loss of both telomeres. (III) Telomeres split/duplication. (IV, V) Dicentrics chromosomes with (IV) or without (V) TTAGGGq sequences at fusions junction. (VI, VII) CoFISH staining with C-rich probe (red) and G-rich (green) probe with (VI) or without telomere-SCE (T-SCE) (VII).

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cell proliferation was not attributable to telomere attrition. Combined inhibition of DNA Ligase IV and shelterin proteins like TRF2 displayed a 50-fold reduced level of chromosome end fusions demonstrating that end fusion required DNA Ligase IV dependant NHEJ [23]. In the absence of DNA Ligase IV, chromosome end fusions depending on NHEJ have been abrogated. Although invalidation of XRCC4 or XLF led to high chromosomal instability [13,24], there is no evidence of their contribution to telomere maintenance. Actually it is noteworthy that XLF exhibits mild chromosomal instability compared to XRCC4 [24]. Artemis has been characterized as a potential effector of telomere protection [3]. Artemis deficient mouse cells are highly sensitive to IR but telomere maintenance is also impaired as evidenced by the increase of telomere fusions and short telomeres [25]. Moreover, cells from Artemis patients also displayed short telomeres confirming that Artemis may function at telomere capping and telomere length as a DNAePK complex. According to all these data, NHEJ partners act as a genomic caretaker in the whole genome and particularly at telomeres. Deregulation of NHEJ components would alter telomere stability and lead to genomic instability. 2.2. Role of homologous recombination at telomeres NHEJ and HR differ in their requirement for a homologous template DNA and in the fidelity of DSB repair. Whereas HR ensures accurate DSB repair, NHEJ does not. The relative contribution of these two DSB-repair pathways is likely to differ depending on the stage of the cell cycle [26,27]. However, the pathways are not mutually exclusive because repair events that involve both pathways can be detected. HR is most efficient in the S and G2 phases of the cell cycle because of the availability of sister chromatids as repair templates [28]. In mammalian cells, HR is less frequently required to DSB repair than NHEJ. After replication, HR repairs DNA DSBs through a precise pathway that utilizes a complementary template usually provided by the sister chromatid during DNA replication. There are many important proteins including the so-called Rad52 group for HR (including Rad51) that form a filament on the single-strand end at the DSB to promote strand exchange. Finally the Holliday Junction is resolved by WRN and others resolvases. MRN and BRCA1/2 also participate to HR through their interaction with HR protein. Cells lacking HR proteins are mildly sensitive to IR and highly sensitive to DNA crosslink agents, which is consistent with the role of HR during replication [29]. As we mentioned previously concerning NHEJ, DSB repair proteins are tightly connected to telomere maintenance. T-loop is needed to protect telomere from inappropriate and deleterious recombinational events. Shelterin proteins prevent HR proteins from accessing the telomeres, and the modification/deregulation of the Shelterin complex generates aberrant events leading to uncontrolled shortening of telomeres. TRF2 mutation elicits the formation of T-loop extra chromosomal fragments that lead to a rapid deletion of

telomere suggesting that uncontrolled HR alters telomere maintenance [30]. The 30 overhang has also been shown to form tetra-stranded DNA structures, termed the G-quadruplex. As a T-loop configuration the G quadruplex has been envisaged to play distinct roles at telomeres. Intramolecular quadruplex represents the large majority of those structures that may protect the G overhang at the chromosomal tail from nucleolytic attack or sequester the single-stranded overhang to avoid inappropriate telomere elongation. The stabilization of G quadruplex ligands by small molecular ligands is correlated with the induction of telomeric instability as evidenced by tel-tel ends or anaphasis bridges [31e33]. Moreover, the presence of these ligands led to the uncapping of telomeres, to the reduction of G overhang [34] and to the activation of members of DDR response [35] following the release of Shelterin proteins [36e38]. Similar to T-loop, the G quadruplex was supposed to prevent inappropriate HR events at telomeres. Such quadruplex forms intramolecular configuration and limits the access to the single-stranded overhang (known as promoting telomeric recombination). The participation of HR in telomere maintenance has been described in mammalian cells especially in mouse models. At this glance, HR has also been shown to regulate telomere length and capping but its contribution is less documented than NHEJ. The suppression of HR partners leads to telomere dysfunctions associated with telomere shortening. In mouse, Rad54 / cells showed a significant increase of telomere end-fusions and have short telomeres compared to control cells [39]. Additionally the abolition of DNA-PKcs in Rad54 / cells enhanced telomere fusions compared to single mutants, suggesting that Rad54 has a distinct role from NHEJ at telomeres. CoFISH studies rule out the role of Rad54 in post replicative capping as reported for DNA-PKcs [39]. In parallel, a Rad51 paralog, Rad51D, has been found at telomeres in both meiotic and somatic cells [40]. Furthermore the disruption of Rad51D altered telomere length and caused telomere dysfunction. In addition, inhibition of Rad51D in alternative lengthening telomeres (ALT) cells induced cell death suggesting the importance of recombination in ALT cells [40]. Hence Rad54 and Rad51D would act in the regulation of telomere length and telomere capping in mammalian cells. Additionally it has been proposed that HR machinery plays a role in the achievement of telomere replication. Rad51, Rad54 and XRCC3 were identified to take part in T-loop formation as evidenced by D-loop assay [41]. In the absence of telomere protection, HR threatens the integrity of the T-loop, looping off telomere. Deletion of the N-terminal domain of TRF2 raises repression of HR at telomeres and induces rapid deletion catalysed by XRCC3 and NBS1 [30]. In addition, Ku 70 has already been shown to repress HR [16]. The MRN complex (Mre11/Rad50/NBS1) plays an important role in HR, as it promotes the processing of DNA ends breaks to improve the recognition and exchange of sister chromatid. Moreover, MRN cleans DSB ends to elicit DSB rejoining by NHEJ reaction. MRN complex contributes to telomere maintenance in human cells. This complex has been located at telomeres. Whereas Mre11 and Rad50 were present

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throughout the whole cell cycle, NBS was recruited at telomeres by TRF2 transiently in S phase [42]. MRN defects result in telomere shortening and telomere dysfunction. Indeed hypomorphic mutation of NBS led to accelerated attrition of telomere size [43]. In addition MRN has been described to process telomere during replication. The inhibition of three components of MRN complex induced G tail shortening only in telomerase cells suggesting that processing by MRN depends on telomerase [44]. The results presented here demonstrate that the homologous recombination machinery is essential in telomere length maintenance and telomere capping in mammalian cells. HR is needed to form functional telomeres in normal or tumour cells. 2.3. Telomeres and DNA-damage signalling Involvement of DNA repair in telomere maintenance is not only restricted to DSB repair. It has also already been shown that DNA damage sensors act in telomere stability. Defects in ATM are responsible for hypersensibility to IR and predisposition of cancer. Like NBS cells, AT cells exhibit short telomeres and a high level of chromosomal aberrations [45]. Defects in ATM result in telomere dysfunction but the effect observed could be related to DSB impaired in AT cells excluding a direct role of ATM in telomere biology. The contribution of ATR is not obvious. Although ATR is associated to telomeres, its absence did not induce telomere dysfunction [46]. However some reports still suggest its requirement at telomeres before complete replication in order to recruit HR machinery to achieve telomere formation [41]. The 9-1-1 complex, DNA damage sensors, has been described as a constitutive component of mammalian telomeres. The absence of Rad9 and Hus1 causes telomere shortening and elevated chromosome end fusions [47]. These data were supported by interaction between 9-1-1 and telomerase suggesting that this complex could act as a regulator of telomere biology.

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relocalization of TRF2 at the lesion sites [51]. So the involvement of DNA DSB is controversial and the nature of the lesions inducing the recruitment of TRF2 remains to be defined. Moreover, if such a redistribution of proteins involved in telomeres occurred, the induction of telomere dysfunction could be expected. However, dicentrics containing telomere sequences located between the two centromeres are not induced by irradiation [52]. However, in yeast, the DNA repair proteins Ku and Rap1 are relocalized at DNA strand breaks. Such data keep active the hypothesis that the telomeres could have a role reserving DNA repair proteins [53]. Even if DNA repair proteins are present at telomeres, they are not processed as double-strand breaks. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a double-strand break at an internal site induces a checkpoint response producing a cell cycle arrest from 8 to 12 h, although a double-strand break near a telomere or near an interstitial telomere sequence produces a 1 or 2 h cell cycle arrest. Therefore, the telomeric sequences might have an anti-checkpoint effect [54]. Other DNA repair proteins have been found at telomeres such as poly-ADP-Riboslyation proteins 1 and 2 (PARP1 and PARP2). PARP2 was found to interact with TRF2 and a defect in PARP2 led to telomere association without modification of telomere length. In contrast to PARP2, despite telomere association and telomere shortening, PARP1 [55] might not be involved in telomere maintenance. Double KO PARP1/ TERC excludes the role of PARP in telomere maintenance [9]. To complete the list of DNA repair members involved in telomere maintenance, we mention the impact of WRN in telomere maintenance. This helicase has been reported to participate in telomere maintenance and telomere replication [56]. The absence of WRN induced a single loss of G rich strand [57,58] leading to premature senescence as reported in WS patients [49]. Table 1 gives a summary of the DNA repair proteins interacting with telomeres. 2.5. Telomeres and nucleus structure

2.4. Telomeres: DNA repair protein tankers? Some proteins are present at both double-strand breaks and telomeres. As we described above, the proteins well known to play a role either in the non-homologous end-joining pathway, like DNA-PKcs and Ku, or in the homologous recombination pathway, are involved in the regulation of length and maintenance of telomeres. In general, the mutations of proteins involved in DNA repair induce telomere dysfunction phenotypes [48]. A mark of double-strand breaks, the phosphorylation of the protein histone H2AX (gH2AX), is found at dysfunctional telomeres [49]. Nevertheless the overexpression of the telomeric repeat factor 2 (TRF2), a specific protein of telomeric sequences, decreases the accumulation of gH2AX at photo-induced breaks in human cells [50]. Furthermore, in human fibroblasts, high irradiation by UV with laser microbeam induces a relocalization of TRF2 at sites of photo-induced tracks. This localization of TRF2 is very early and transient after the induction of lesions [50]. However irradiation by gamma rays or alpha particles do not promote the

The organization of the telomeres during the cell cycle has been studied in human cells and in mice cells by in situ hybridization with telomere-specific fluorescent probes. During G1 and S phase, telomeres are distributed in the whole nucleus and during G2-phase, they are relocalized to form a telomeric disk, in the middle of the nucleus. In normal human cells, most of the telomeres are distant from each other, but some of them seem to be closer. This telomere organization appears to be modified in tumour cells where the telomeres form aggregates [59]. The study of telomere associations in the interphase of non-cycling human cells showed a close proximity between the subtelomeric regions of the short and the long arms of the same chromosome, suggesting that the subtelomeric regions are associated in an intrachromosomal manner [60]. The integrity of the telomere organization might be important for the genetic stability. The spatial organization of telomere within the nucleus could be altered if telomeric proteins are lacking or delocalized. Indeed TRF1 was detected as a component of the nuclear matrix, and

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64 Table 1 DSB repair protein involved in telomere maintenance Protein

Model

Function

Sensitivity

Telomeres dysfunction

Reference

Fusions

Telomeres interaction

Length Ku70/80 DNA-PKcs DNA LigaselV

Mouse/human Mouse KO/SCID Mouse/human

NHEJ NHEJ NHEJ

IR, Ox IR, Ox IR

Shorter Shorter/longer Shorter

Yes Yes No

Yes Yes Yes

ND

Yes

ND

ND/shorter Shorter Shorter Shorter Normal Normal/shorter Normal Shorter Shortening Normal Shorter Normal

Yes Yes Yes Yes ND No ND Yes Yes No Yes No

ND ND Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes ND ND

Hsu [11] Goytisolo [12] d’Adda di Fagagna [13], Cabuy [3] d’Adda di Fagagna [13], Zha [24] Rooney [25], Cabuy [3] Jaco [39] Tarsounas [40] Al-Wahiby [134] Chai [44] Chai [44], Bai [135] Chai [44] Hsu [11] Francia [47] Dantzer [136] d’Adda di Fagagna [55] Zhu [137]

XRCC4

Mouse KO

NHEJ

IR

Artemis RAD54 RAD51D BRCA1 MRE11 NBS RAD50 ATM hRAD9/Hus1/RAD1 PARPZ PARP1 ERCC1/XPF

Mouse/human Mouse KO Mouse/human Mouse KO Human siRNA Human siRNA/patient Human siRNA Mouse/human Mouse KO Mouse KO Mouse KO Mouse/human

NHEJ HR HR HR DNA sensing DNA sensing DNA sensing DNA Damage DNA sensing BER BER NER

IR IR IR IR IR IR IR IR, UV, Ox IR IR, Ox IR, Ox UV

Description of DNA repair proteins involved only in mammalian cells (mouse, human). IR, ionizing radiation; Ox, oxidative damage; NHEJ, non-homologous endjoining; HR, homologous recombination; BER, base excision repair; NER, nucleotide excision repair. Telomere interactions refer to interactions with shelterin complex.

a poor anchorage of TRF1 contributes to a limited cellular lifespan [61]. 3. Damaged telomeres: how are they dealt with? 3.1. Oxidative stress, UV and telomeres Two kinds of telomere shortening exist in cells. The first one is replicative erosion. Telomeres limit the number of cell cycles and act as a mitotic clock [62]. Human telomeres perform a limited number of cell divisions in culture. Telomeres gradually shorten 20e300 bp after each cell division [63] due to incomplete replication at distal ends of chromosomes [64]. At least critically short telomeres initiate an irreversible arrest in G1, termed replicative senescence. However, replicative shortening is not the only explanation for the attrition of telomeres. Exogene or endogen factors could also modulate the replicative life span. In addition to constant replicative shortening, erosion can also depend on stress. Several conditions can induce premature senescence as radiation [65], treatment with oxygen species [66,67], culture in chronic mild hyperoxia [68], or oncogenes [69]. Stress dependant shortening associated with replicative attrition led at least to senescence. Thus, human cells MRC5/WI38 exhibit a high telomere shortening and a reduced life span under hyperoxia conditions [70]. The correlation between oxidative stress and telomere shortening has been confirmed in inherited respiratory chain disease [71] known to generate high quantities of free radicals species. Accelerated telomere shortening could be compensated by antioxidative treatment. Treatment with ascorbic acid [72] or radical scavengers like phenyl butylnitrone [73] reduced the telomere shortening rate and prolonged the life span. Therefore, antioxidant enzymes (glutathione peroxidase or superoxide dismutase) play an important role in preventing rapid

ROS-dependant shortening [74]. These data explain the importance of the antioxidant defence capacity in telomere length control and explain the differences between several cell lines. Telomere shortening is inversely correlated to antioxidant capacity. Telomeres from fibroblasts with weak antioxidant capacity shorten faster and inversely. As we described above, telomere shortening depend on external factors such as oxidative lesions. How could oxidative stress influence telomere shortening? Telomeres are preferential targets for acute oxidative damage [75,76]. The DNA repeats GGG are highly sensitive to oxygen species and generated lesions such as 8oxoG, the main substrate of the Base excision repair (BER) pathway. Consequently SSBs were accumulated at telomeres due to low efficient repair of SSB compared to non-transcribed sequences like minisatellites [77e79]. Indeed the access to lesions at telomeres was restricted by the telosome, and DNA repair enzymes were less efficient at this zone than at the bulk genome. In this context, persistent SSB would interfere with the replication fork leading to telomere loss. In fact, lesions in C-rich strand (template for leading strand) induce stalled replication fork and 50 end would be degraded leading to shortening of telomere. Impaired BER repair at telomeres elicit stress dependant shortening [79]. 3.2. Telomeres and radiation-induced damage: single and double-strand breaks As we described above, several factors play a role both in DNA damage response and in telomere maintenance. DSB repair pathways like NHEJ and HR participate in the protection of telomeres suggesting a tight connection between these two fields. The question of the behaviour of telomeres compared to interstitials sequences after irradiation in mammalian

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cells is open. Indeed telomeres were less efficient than other sequences to repair SSB [77] due probably to their T-loop structure reducing access to DNA repair machinery at DNA lesions. So telomeres may fail to repaired DSB. In yeast, near the telomeres, Isce1 induced DSBs were less repaired by end joining suggesting that DSBs processing is different from the rest of the genome [80]. In agreement with previous data, Isce1 induced chromosomal rearrangements were different between telomeres and interstitial sequences demonstrating that DSB was not repaired near the telomeres [81,82]. No evidence is actually available for the presence of radioinduced breaks at telomeres. The understanding of the interaction between telomeres and DSBs was extended to study the behaviour of dysfunctional telomeres. Dysfunctional or eroded telomeres are sensed as true DSBs according to the presence of DNA damage response (DDR) proteins at telomeres in senescent cells or Shelterin deficient cells. Late generation (G3/G4) of mTERC / cells exhibit shorter telomeres and higher sensitivity to radiation exposure than wild type cells [83]. Furthermore in irradiated cells, eroded telomeres are used as inappropriate substrates to NHEJ and joined with radiation induced broken ends. Three types of chromosomal rearrangements are subsequently formed: telomereetelomere, telomereeDSB, DSBeDSB. These kinds of rearrangements were also described in the absence of telomere capping. Hence, the disruption of DNAPKcs or TRF2 promotes end fusions in mammalian cells, and dysfunctional telomeres could join to radiation induced breaks [20,84]. Together those data suggest that uncapped or short telomeres act as DSBs interfering with the correct rejoining of broken ends. Telomere dysfunctions result in hypersensitivity to IR and illustrate the interplay between telomere and DNA repair. 3.3. Damaged telomeres and telomerase Telomerase is suspected to have a role in the repair of some DNA damage, particularly double-strand breaks [85]. This theory is supported by the fact that a very short template homology is necessary for the telomerase to act, inducing a low specificity necessity for its recruitment [86]. Moreover, double-strand breaks are accepted as the most important lesion subsequent to ionizing radiation, and many in vivo and cell line based reports describe an increase of telomerase activity after exposure to ionizing radiation [24,87e92]. It is proposed that telomerase could play a role in radiation induced damage response. The consequences of mutations in the telomerase complex genes (DKC1, TERC, TERT) result in a loss of telomere maintenance and telomere shortening (for review on dyskeratosis congenital, see the paper from the Vulliamy team, Biochimie, this issue). However, nothing is known on the role of mutated telomerase in DNA damage repair. In the mean time, a lower repair mechanism of double-strand breaks has been reported in mice lacking telomerase activity with shorter telomeres [93]. However, the underlying mechanism is still not well understood. Indeed, telomerase would lengthen preferentially the shortest telomeres [94]. The proposed theory

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states that irradiated cells undergo an extensive senescence process and that telomerase could lengthen telomeres in those cells, which in turn appears to be important in post-irradiated survival and damage processing. 3.4. Interstitial telomeric sequences DNA repair is not equal across the chromosome, and some regions of the genome are more prone to breakage than others. Some of the well described fragile sites contain an interstitial telomeric sequence (ITS), such as in human the chromosome 2 fragile region 2q11-2q14 which may be resulting from the fusion of two acrocentric chromosomes present in the ancestor apes [95e97]. ITS, up to 10 kb telomeric sequences, are not sensitive to the exonuclease BAL 31 both in human and mouse [98]. Their origin is not clear; they seem to be the result of telomereetelomere fusion between two chromosomes during evolution or an insertion of telomeric DNA in a fragile site during DSB repair [99]. In hamster cells, ITS form large blocks of several hundred kilobases mainly localized in the pericentromeric regions. It has been reported that ITS from Chinese hamster cells are more prone to breakage, consequently they are over involved in the formation of chromosomal aberrations compared to the whole genome, spontaneously and after irradiation [100]. As a matter of fact, sensitivity is not clear for these short ITS in human. In a human model we demonstrated that even 800 bp telomeric sequences inserted as an ITS are not over unstable both spontaneously [101]and after irradiation [102]. We can wonder why some ITS are more prone to breakage. ITS could be hotspots of radiation induced breakage or misrepaired regions explaining the over involvement in chromosomal aberrations. As previously described, two mechanisms are required to repair DNA DSBs that could occur after irradiation: the NHEJ and HR pathways. In wild type hamster cells CHO9 and V79, ITS exhibited a lower initial rejoining rate of ionizing radiation induced DSBs than the whole genome overall [103]. This result shows intragenomic heterogeneity in DSB repair. Studies on DNA repair pathway mutants have also been performed. Thus, the rejoining rate in ITS does not seem to be modified either in DNA-PKcs or Rad51C mutants, respectively from the NHEJ and HR pathway. The authors hypothesize the possibility of another repair pathway more specific to DNA sequences or chromatin structure for the repair of DSBs induced in ITS. The aspect of the chromatin structure from ITS seems to be a very important factor in the radiosensitivity both in breakage and in repair mechanisms of ‘‘fragile sites’’. Studies of proteins in the chromatin of ITS reveal on the one hand the presence of the telomeric protein TRF1 in immortal CHO interphasic nucleus [104], and on the other hand the presence of the telomeric protein TRF2 in hamster chromosomes [105], underlying the capacity of these proteins to bind duplex T2AG3. TRF proteins would play the role of suppressors of the HR that could occur between telomeric sequences and have a potential role in the processing of the DSB repair in

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these radiosensitive sites. Thus telomeric sequences in hamster cells that are highly involved in chromosome rearrangements might be highly radiosensitive not only due to a particular propensity of the DNA sequence to break but also due to its three-dimensional structure and chromatin organization.

take part to this attrition [3]. Because radiosensitive cells may present abnormal response to oxidative stress and the fact that telomeres structures are preferential targets for oxidative damage, telomeres may be considered as sensors of genotoxic stress.

3.5. Nucleus organization and break repair

4.2. Telomere maintenance and multistep carcinogenesis

In mammalian cells, the motion of the two ends of a doublestrand break has been followed in vivo. A break induced at a specific site has been produced by the Isce1 enzyme. By microscope observations of fluorescent proteins on both sides of the break, the position of the break seems to be immobile in the nucleus. The proximity between the ends is maintained despite mutations in DNA repair proteins (H2AX, NBS1, Mre11 and Rad50). There is an increase of population with separate signals for the two ends of the break in cells deficient for Ku80 [106]. A link between telomere organization and DNA repair has not yet been described in mammalian cells as it is observed in yeast. In this organism, the telomeres are clustered at the nuclear periphery allowing a specific localization of some proteins. Indeed subregions of chromosomes are organized in the nucleus and the 32 telomeres are clustered in 4e8 foci at the nuclear periphery. The localization of telomeres near the nuclear pore is necessary to repair a subtelomeric break [107].

Telomere length is correlated to stability, and acts as an internal cell timer to limit cell replication. Indeed, recent studies have proved that short telomeres can be recognized as doublestrand breaks and activate the downstream p53/RB dependent DNA-damage pathway triggering senescence [49]. However, if telomere shortening is now accepted to be correlated to the replicative potential of cells, it is still unknown if it is the telomere length per se or the consecutive structural alteration that triggers senescence [23,114,115]. Many studies clearly described dysfunctional too short telomeres as a universal mechanism in the earliest phases of cancer development [116e118]. A correlation between telomere attrition and genome instability has also been reported [119]. In addition, it is demonstrated that the shortest telomeres are involved in telomere fusions and subsequent genomic rearrangements [120]. The subsequent proposed mechanism for telomere related carcinogenesis states that shortened telomeres induce senescence. Even if a single telomere can trigger the BFB cycle and rearrangement in telomerase positive cells [121], multiple short telomeres would be necessary for DNA-damage activation and senescence entering primary cells [122]. Then, few cells undergoing senescence undergo primary genomic instability leading to mutations. Certain mutations could then give a multiplicative advantage for further multiplication capacity [56]. Those cells with further replication capacity undergo in turn further telomere shortening with telomere length below its stability threshold. These too short telomeres lead to breakageefusionebridges (BFB) cycles and latterly to a generalized genomic instability and cell death (crisis)[120,123]. At this level, it can turn out that some of the resulting rearrangements favour the acquisition of phenotypes contributing to the unlimited replicative potential characteristic of post-crisis cells. It is hypothesized that the exposition to carcinogen or oxidative stress can enhance those phenomena. In the majority of cancers (80%), this unlimited replicative potential is achieved by telomerase reactivation, allowing telomere lengthening. In this case, all tumours from one patient should present, at least in the first stages, the same genomic instabilities due to the same too short telomeres that differ among individuals. Later, reiterated BFBs cycle would trigger randomly generated modifications leading to karyotype heterogeneity within tumours.

4. Damaged telomeres: numerous consequences 4.1. Telomere maintenance and cellular radiosensitivity Entrance of cells into senescence is accompanied by telomere shortening. Many studies demonstrated that fibroblasts with short telomeres are more radiosensitive than their younger counterparts with long telomeres [108] linking telomeres with radiosensitivity [12,85,93]. Indeed, short telomeres increase cell radiosensitivity, and radiosensitive human cells show shorter telomeres than normal cells [3]. The rate of anaphasic bridges is higher in these radiosensitive cells than in wild type cells. Individuals with short telomeres present higher frequencies of radio-induced damage than individuals with long telomeres [109]. As the elongation of telomere revert the radiosensitive phenotype [110], telomere length can modulate in vitro chromosome radiosensitivity in human cells. Telomere maintenance mechanisms are directly or indirectly related to DNA damage response [3,111]. The connections between telomeres and radiosensitivity are supported by the fact that mice lacking telomerase are highly sensitive to IR [90] and mice deficient in DDR have dysfunctional telomeres [112]. In some human diseases, deficiencies in DDR affect telomere maintenance [43,45,113]. The presence at telomeres of Ku and DNA-PKcs proteins from the NHEJ repair pathway has been demonstrated, and deficiency in these proteins disturb the telomere function thus affecting the radiosensitivity of the cell [10,12]. Although the mechanism by which telomere shortening in radiosensitive cells is unknown [111], oxidative stress can

4.3. Telomere length heterogeneity and tumour predisposition A natural heterogeneity in telomere length within human somatic cells is described. Telomere length on each chromosome is found to be similar in all tissues for a particular

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patient, but differs between patients [124]. A huge heterogeneity can be observed among chromosomes. Indeed significant differences in relative telomere intensities are frequently observed between chromosomal homologues [125]. Large-scale differences in zygotic telomere length are maintained throughout development [126]. This telomere length heterogeneity between homologous chromosomes might be linked to a potential differential in telomere attrition, lengthening and structure. Telomeres shorten in a gradual fashion, consistent with simple losses through end replication, and the rates of erosion are independent of the allele size for chromosome X/Y [126]. A statistically significant positive correlation between the lengths of allelic telomeres, suggests common factors influencing telomere length of homologous chromosomes [127]. A high correlation is observed between the relative lengths of genetically identical telomeres in monozygotic twins, while this correlation is lower in dizygotic twins. Thus individual telomere lengths would be inherited from parents and this allelic length distribution is maintained throughout life [56]. The specificity of chromosome imbalances detected in solid tumours and the occurrence of chromosome imbalance due to telomere loss favour the hypothesis of a link between telomere heterogeneity and tumour predisposition in specific tissues among individuals. Thus, we proposed previously the TELOLOH hypothesis for TELomere Oriented Loss Of Heterozygoty [128]. The failure to properly repair radiation-induced damaged telomeres might favour the occurrence of chromosome instability of the shortest telomeres and progression towards tumorigenesis. 4.4. Telomere instability and transmission of radiation-induced damage As described above, continuous telomere shortening during proliferation and/or telomere maintenance failure will contribute to the multi-step carcinogenesis process. Most of the repair of DNA damage is completed in the few hours post-irradiation. When a cell survives, mutations are believed to be fixed and transmitted to cell generations. However, the direct link between these initial biological lesions and those described in radiation-induced tumour cells has never been established. Studies on the transmission of radiationinduced damage through several cell generations have highlighted the complexity of the mechanisms involved. Over the last two decades there is increasing evidence that accumulation of DNA damage continues in the progeny of irradiated cells. The role of telomeres was demonstrated in the chromosomal instability detected in the long term progeny of irradiated human fibroblasts [129,130]. The detected chromosome fusions involved a shortened telomeric sequence suggesting that telomere dysfunction could make an important contribution to chromosome instability. The end-to-end fusions could be linked to telomere shortening associated with cell divisions or to telomere loss due to a DNA double-strand break occurring near the end of a chromosome [131]. This leads to the formation of ter-ter dicentrics that could initiate a more extensive

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chromosomal instability leading to large LOH (Mb) due to the loss of whole chromosome arms, proliferative advantage and increased lifespan in the progeny of irradiated human fibroblasts. Using human cells tagged with plasmid integrated at the end of a ‘‘marker’’ chromosome, we studied the consequences of single telomere loss. We demonstrated that a single DSB near the telomere could be dramatically mutagenic for the cell, leading to: (1) chromosome instability, (2) gene amplification via the breakage/fusion/bridge (B/F/B) cycle and (3) chromosome imbalances (gain and loss of chromosome arms) [132]. Chromosomes lacking one telomere remain unstable until they are capped [121]. After irradiation the large majority of the induced mutations are recessive, i.e. will remain silent until the occurrence of a mutation or LOH on the second allele. Such an event is highly improbable at low dose if we take into account the fact that the target is one gene among 25,000. We propose the following hypothetical scheme of radiation oncogenesis as summarized in Fig 2: (a) induction of recessive gene mutations (direct effect of radiation); (b) accumulation of genomic alteration in the irradiated tissues with aging and proliferation of irradiated and non-irradiated cells; (c) unmasking, amplification of radiation induced or pre-existing mutations; (d) loss of tumour suppressor functions (aneuploidy created by large chromosome imbalances due to telomere maintenance failure following natural aging or accelerated by damaged telomere); (e) gain of proliferative advantage; (f) ongoing instability: cycles of steps (b)e(e); (g) initiation and progression of multistage carcinogenesis. One of our running hypotheses is that the heterogeneity of telomere length might play an amplificator effect (cf. Fig. 2). Indeed we do not face 25,000 genes anymore, but 92 telomeres, a few being short, that will permit in one step the unmasking of radiation-induced mutations (via chromosome imbalances or LOH up to 100 Mb) for thousands of genes. A study of several radiation-induced tumours supports this hypothesis. It was shown that every radiationinduced solid tumour followed the same mutagenic process (deletions, chromosomes imbalances) even in those for which the ‘‘spontaneous’’ tumour is characterized by balanced rearrangements [133]. 5. Conclusion Damaged telomeres might be seen as multi-shot guns, acting from high radiosensitivity to occurrence of radiation induced tumours. Damaged telomeres are poorly repaired although DDR proteins are present at telomeres and DNA repair proteins are involved in telomere maintenance. The nature of telomeric sequences and chromatin structure would promote the accumulation of DNA damage resulting in telomere defects (shortening, dysfunction). From the state-of-art described in this review, we propose the following mechanisms to articulate the links between telomeres and radiosensitivity. Telomere maintenance would be altered by irradiation via a direct effect (damage within telomeres) or via an indirect effect (uncapping of telomere postirradiation and alteration of telomere maintenance). Shortly

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Fig. 2. Short telomeres favour radiation-induced tumour progression by unmasking recessive mutations.

after irradiation an effect of telomere maintenance failure might be cellular and organismal radiosensitivity. However, the consequences of damaged telomeres are not restricted to a short term effect. Indeed the major impact of the loss of telomere integrity might occur in the long term, during multistep carcinogenesis. During cell proliferation, telomere attrition occurs after each cell division until replicative senescence. Telomere instability involving chromosomes with the shortest telomeres will permit the unmasking of radiation-induced mutations that could provide a proliferative advantage to few cells. Such LOH will be oriented by telomere heterogeneity. Moreover, irradiation could increase the telomere length heterogeneity. The chromosomal instability generated by damaged telomeres will promote each step of transformation from normal to fully transformed cells. Last but not least, many solid tumours being characterized by specific chromosome imbalances, the endogenous telomere length profiles, which vary among individuals, might be an important epigenetic factor in radiation-induced cancer risk predisposition. Acknowledgements We are in debt to Axel Meunier for his valuable assistance. The work in the L.S. laboratory was supported by EDF,

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